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The panic at the stock markets all around the world in the last days has demonstrated once more the fragile character of the so-called recovery of the
capitalist world economy since the Great Recession in 2008/09. At this point we will limit ourselves to a few remarks as we plan to publish a book about the current world situation and its
fundamental contradictions by next week. This document will include a more extensive chapter about the world economy.

Naturally, we are not in a position to predict if the stock market panic of the last days will continue directly into a crash or not. As we know from past
events it is possible that there might be a superficial temporary recovery. But it is certainly the case that this panic reflects the highly fragile state of the world economy and its explosive
inner contradictions as we have outlined in past works.(1)These contradictions are in turn an
expression of the fundamental decay of capitalism as a mode of production.(2)

The IMF and other bourgeois think tanks have published in the past months several reports in which they presented a relatively optimistic picture. In its
January 2018 Update the IMF states: “The cyclical upswing underway since mid-2016 has continued to strengthen. Some 120 economies,
accounting for three quarters of world GDP, have seen a pickup in growth in year-on-year terms in 2017, the broadest synchronized global growth upsurge since 2010.”(3)TheWorld GDP is supposed to grow
(calculated by Market Exchange Rates) by 2.5% (2016), 3.2% (2017), 3.3% (2018) and 3.2% (2019).

However, the smarter bourgeois economists are fully aware that there is not much behind the official optimistic fanfares. The World Economic Forum, the
organizer of the summit of the world’s elite in Davos in January, warns in its report: “However, this
relatively upbeat picture masks numerous concerns. This has been the weakest post-recession recovery on record. Productivity growth remains puzzlingly weak. Investment growth has been subdued,
and in developing economies it has slowed sharply since 2010. And in many countries the social and political fabric has been badly frayed by many years of stagnating real
incomes.”(4)

The development of investment and profits continues to be weak or is even in decline. As the OECD demonstrated in its latestEconomic Outlook, average growth of output since 2008 has been clearly below the average of the two business cycles
before. (5) We see a similar picture for the development ofinvestment and profit growth in the U.S. accordingtothe latest World Bank statistic. (See Figure 1). This is also true when we look to the dynamic of investment in the other
major economy – China. (See Figure 2)

Figure 1. US: Investment and Profit Growth 2000-2017(6)

Figure 2. China: Investment Growth 2015-2017(7)

Furthermore, as we have pointed out in past World Perspectives documents, we continue to see a stagnation of world trade in relation to production. As we have
said, the era of globalization is about to come to an end. According to the World Trade Organization 791 new non-tariff barriers appeared
annually on average in the years 2010-15 – that is, more than ever in history.(8)Another reflection of this development is the decline ofcross-border capital flows as a percentage of
global GDP since the Great Recession in 2008/09. From a peak level of 20.7% in 2007 it fell to a record-low of 2.6% in 2015.

These stagnation tendencies of the business cyclereflect the failure of the monopoly bourgeoisie to overcome the fundamental inner contradictions of the capitalist world economy – its over-accumulation of capital
and the fall of the rate of profit. Even the latest issue of the U.S. “Economic Report of the President”, annually produced by the White House and not known for a pessimistic
outlook, is forced to draw attention to the decreasing rate of capital accumulation. It reproduces a figure showing the development of net investment as a share of the U.S. capital stock between
1945 and 2015. (See Figure 3) This figure reflects the declining dynamic of the expanded reproduction of capital:“In 2009, net investment as a share of the capital stock fell to its lowest level in the post-World War II era and the nominal capital stock even declined. Although
net investment has rebounded somewhat in the recovery, its level as a share of the capital stock remains well below the historical average and it declined slightly in 2015.” (9)

Figure 3.Net Investment as a Share of the Capital Stock,USA, 1945-2015(10)

While the capitalist class has been unable to overcome these fundamental contradictions of its mode of production, it has been able, until now, to delay the
beginning of the next recession. What have been the reasons for this? There are several reasons but the most important seem to be a massive increase in debt reaching a level higher than before
the last recession in 2007. Related to this there is a huge bubble in the financial sector which will sooner or later explode. All this has been made possible by the reckless policy of the
imperialist central banks of printing money and keeping down the interest rates at nearly zero.

Let us look to these developments more in detail. In Table 1 we see the latest calculations of theInstitute
of International Financeon global debt. It shows that debt as a share of global output rose massively in the past 15 years. Significantly,
while debt as a share of global GDP was 276% before the last recession, this has grown to 327% in 2017 – despite all the official promises to reduce debt as it was understood to be a major reason
for the severity of the last recession!

Table 1. Global Debt (All Sectors), 2002-2017(11)

In Trillion US-Dollar Global Debt as a
Share of Global GDP

2002 86
246%

2007 149
276%

2012 205
305%

2017 217
327%

In Table 2 we see the breakdown of this debt into the different sectors: Non-Financial Corporations, Government, Financial Sector, Household. It is of
particular interest to see that – compared with the situation before the last recession – the two sectors where debt increased most rapidly have been the non-financial corporations and the
government. While it is only logical that the capitalists are prepared to increase their debt in order to keep their business operations going in this period of declining profit rate, it is
telling that government debt is increasing massively but not that of the financial sector. This is all the more interesting since it was the financial sector which was massively in debt before
the recession in 2007 and which triggered it. The explanation lies in the fundamental character of the capitalist government – as Marx and Engels already stated in the Communist Manifesto:
“The executive of the modern state is but a committee for managing the common affairs of the whole
bourgeoisie” (12) Concretely, the capitalist state has taken over the debts of the banks and, by this, helped the financial speculators to start
their risky business again. Meanwhile, the working class has to pay for the increased public debt with higher taxes and cuts in social service!

The growth of indebtedness is taking place in all imperialist economies. Whilethe level of indebtedness was
already high in the Western imperialist economies before the recession in 2008/09 but not so much in the so-called “emerging markets” (including China), this has changed now. In fact, debt has
even increased faster in China than in the old imperialist economies! According to the latest OECD report,aggregate debt in China rose from less
than 100% of GDP at the end of 2008 to 170% by early 2016. (14) According to another report, China’s total debt is believed to be around 280% of GDP, with corporate debt rising quickly to 160% of
GDP, the highest level among the major world economies. (15) In facts, debts in government and non-financial corporations sector increased in nearly all G20 countries. Marx observed in Volume III
of Capital that the credit system helps the capitalists to accelerate production. However, he also warned that indebtedness is a double-edged sword. The more it accelerates production, the
more it will later result in violent eruptions: ”Hence, the credit system accelerates the material development of the productive forces and the
establishment of the world-market. It is the historical mission of the capitalist system of production to raise these material foundations of the new mode of production to a certain degree of perfection. At the same time credit accelerates the violent eruptions of this contradiction – crises – and thereby the elements of
disintegration of the old mode of production.“ (16)

There are many indications thattheglobal economy is experiencing a
similar bubble as it did in the last two decades. Globalstock markets are hitting all-time high after all-time high. But in fact this is a bubble which
should soon implode. The WEF alarmingly observes: “US stocks have only twice in history been higher than they are at the moment: just prior to the crashes
of 1929 and 2000.” (17) Another example for the bizarre bubble is the hype around the cryptocurrency Bitcoin, which increased in value by around 1200% in 2017! Likewise, the Global House
Price Index has increased massively and has reached now the same level when the bubble was at its height in 2007! (See Figure 4) In short, assets are unsustainably overpriced and this bubble must
implode rather sooner than later. Such an implosion most likely would trigger another Great Recession.

Figure 4.Global House Price Index Q1-2000 – Q2-2017(18)

In fact, the next recession will most likely be worse than the last. This is the case for a number of reasons related to the deep stagnation of the capitalist
world economy. But at this place we want to point out only three important factors. First, during the last recession in 2008/09, the dramatic effects on the world economy could be softened by the
fact that the recession had its focus in the old imperialist countries. Hence, China which experienced still some significant growth, as well as other “emerging economies”, could soften the
consequences of the slump. This is no longer the case. As we have demonstrated, indebtedness in China and other “emerging economies” has significantly increased and, hence, their ability for
counter-cyclical interventions is much more limited now.

Secondly, the dramatic effects on the world economy in 2008/09 could be softened by the massive state-capitalist intervention. The capitalist governments were
prepared to bail out the banks, take over their debts and pump money since then into the economy (the so-called “Quantitative Easing”, as we have explained in past documents on the world
economy). However, again, this instrument is no longer available. The governments are now much higher indebted than they were last time and therefore their room for maneuver is much more
limited.

Thirdly, the central banks were able in past recessions to lower the interest rates. This monetary instrument made it easier for banks and corporations to take
new loans and to soften the effects of the recession. However, this instrument too is no longer available since the central banks already lowered the interest rates to nearly 0% in the past
years!Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers noted in a recent speech that the Fed typically has lowered interest rates by 5 percentage
points over time to stimulate the economy in recessions. However, this is no longer possible as the Fed had lowered the federal funds rate close to zero and just recently raised it to 1.25-1.5%.
Other Central Banks – like the European Central Bank, the Bank of Japan and the Bank of England – are in an even worse position since their interest rates are currently even lower than the
Fed’s.

There can be no doubt that the capitalist world economy is heading towards a new Great Recession which will be most likely more devastating than the last one.
An increasing number of economists already get nervous. Jean-Claude Trichet, the former President of the European Central Bank from 2003 to 2011, warned in a recently published interview about
the “a very serious risk of a new crisis.”(19)We can not
say if this will happen in 2018 or later. In fact, the massive state-capitalist interventions and the huge global indebtedness, which reminds one to a Ponzi scheme, make a precise prognosis
difficult. However, whenever the next Great Recession will explode, it will tremendously shatter the bourgeois order and open a new phase of major attacks by the capitalists as well as of class
struggles.